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Cheap Ass Monday: Stop me, oh-ho-oh, stop me.

Stop me if you think that you’ve heard this one before.* Pasta e lenticchie mediorientale. That is, pasta and lentils, a classic Neapolitan dish, with a Middle Eastern twist. As far as I can recall, unlike last week, I have not already written this post before. Go me! Short-term memory rules!

*Nothing’s changed; I still love you, oh I still love you. Only slightly, only slightly less than I used to.**

**Not YOU. You, I still love exactly the same.

The Westminster Dog Show is on in the background, and I’m hearing out of one ear that an Airedale Terrier has been disqualified because he had a “conflict of interest.” Moonlighting as a Dandie Dinmont Terrier? Tragic.

Pasta and lentils is an old-school dish from Naples, the original homeland of my family before we wised up and moved south, to the undiscovered beaches of Puglia*. (I mean, seriously, the Neapolitan mafia even controls garbage disposal there, and for part of 2008 the ENTIRE CITY was covered in bags of waste three stories high. It’s almost as awful as Cleveland, which still takes the prize for once having set a LAKE on FIRE because HOW THE FUCK DO YOU DO THAT.)

Anyway, pasta and lentils. Sometimes it’s more like a soup, sometimes more like a pasta dish, sometimes the lentils are kinda like a sauce, sometimes they’re clear flecks throughout the pasta. The only definite ingredients are pasta (gasp!), lentils (NO!), and tomatoes. The pasta can be broken up spaghetti, orechiette, or whatever the hell else you want.

In other words, pasta e lenticchie is a dissembler of a dish, a shape shifter. It can be your best friend, or your worst nightmare. If your worst nightmare is a lentil.

If your worst nightmare is a lentil you’ve either led quite the charmed life or are schizophrenic.

Keeping with my Middle Eastern twist, I cooked some green lentils my new favorite way: with a clove-studded onion. No, I wasn’t clever enough to come up with that myself, I learned it from Susan Spicer’s Crescent City Cooking (great book) while making this kick-ass lentil salad. It’s a magical idea that turns things delicious. I threw a bay leaf in too, for good measure.

*Some of them have now been discovered by British people looking for inexpensive holiday destinations. Dear British People: My town is pronounced BRIN-di-si, not Brin-DEE-si. It’s not hard. Warmly, Me.

The three most beautiful words in the English language: Niman Ranch Bacon. Le sigh.

I should note here, lest I sound too authoritative on the subject of pasta e lenticchie, I have never actually made this before. As a child, I loathed lentils – they actually were my worst nightmare – and would be forced to sit at the kitchen table until I developed ass bedsores from the chair as I sat staring at my congealed bowl of lentil soup, not allowed to leave until it was eaten. So it’s unclear that you can actually trust anything I’m saying, but let’s move on.

For the tomato component, I started with some diced bacon in a smidge* of olive oil, adding some onion and garlic once the bacon fat had rendered out.

You know the only thing that makes me distrust the America’s Test Kitchen people, although I otherwise revere their New Best Recipe? The fact that in a recent issue of Cook’s Illustrated bacon taste-testing, Niman Ranch bacon ranked in the “not recommended” section. HERESY! Because that is some fucking good bacon, and leaves you the best drippings of any bacon I’ve ever had, ever.

*That’s right, I said smidge.

Do you know what it’s like to be dominated by a Scottish Terrier? The AKC says that they think they’re smarter than we are, so get ready to welcome your Scottie Overlords.

Into the bacon and onion I tossed two diced tomatoes (from a can, you’ll catch me moving to Cleveland before you catch me buying “fresh” tomatoes in the middle of winter in the Northeast). Then, to up the Middle Easternness, I added cumin, coriander and hot pepper, along with salt. I really like coriander in sweet dishes, but in savory dishes I love the way it kind of instantly “falafelizes” anything.

I also added a shot of red wine vinegar, to balance the earthy lentils with some acid.

Seriously, they’re coming for us.

By the way, I know I don’t have to tell you that when buying canned tomatoes you should always be buying San Marzano tomatoes. Because you already knew that. I’m just repeating it for my own good, really. S-A-N M-A-R-Z-A-N-O.

The Scottie just won the terrier group. THE DOMINATION BEGINS.

While the lentils finished cooking and the tomato mixture broke down a little, I cooked up some rotini and chiffonaded some spinach (Can you turn “chiffonade” into a verb? I’m not sure. But I just did, and then BLEW YOUR FUCKING MIND). I drained the finished lentils and dumped them on the spinach, then piled the tomatoes on top. After I added the pasta, I tossed everything together until the spinach was barely wilted.

You know I can never keep anything from you: Just like the blue cheese croissants, I wasn’t actually sure that this would taste good. In retrospect, I wonder how I could ever have thought a blue cheese croissant could be bad, and I now feel the same way about this pasta.

Quarter-cup of lentils, $0.47. Two servings of rotini, $0.40. One slice of good bacon, $0.75. Two canned tomatoes, $0.43. Two big handfuls of spinach, $1.24. Onion, garlic, olive oil, spices and vinegar, pantry staples. Total cost: $3.29, or $1.645 per person.

It was good. Surprisingly good. One, now that I’m a grown-up I love lentils, and find green lentils to be particularly tasty. Two, bacon. Three, the spices really came together beautifully; I’m only sad I used some already-ground spices I’d saved and didn’t grind the cumin and coriander fresh, which would have added a whole new depth of flavor. It could have used a touch more vinegar, but other than that was a really satisfying, simple and inexpensive dish.

And cheap. Really, really cheap. (In fact, there were enough leftovers for one of us to take for lunch tomorrow). I dub this “recessione speciale pasta e lenticchie.”

Pasta e Lenticchie Mediorientale, serves 2I’m going to tell you up front: this is not a recipe, because I didn’t measure a freaking thing. It’s more like a set of guidelines, and you can vary the spice profile however you want. I won’t be offended.

Take one of the onions, peel it, and stick the cloves right into it. Add it to a medium saucepan with the bay leaf, lentils, and 3 cups of water. Cook until the lentils are tender but not falling apart. Drain any remaining liquid.

Dice the bacon. Heat a small pan over medium heat and add the bacon and olive oil. Cook for 4-5 minutes, until the bacon has rendered its fat. While the bacon is cooking, dice the second onion and all the garlic cloves; add them to the pan and saute until they soften (but don’t brown them heavily). Dice the canned tomatoes and add them to the bacon-onion mix along with the cumin, coriander, cayenne and some salt and pepper. Keep the pan over low heat to let the flavors meld and the tomatoes break down while you finish up. Add the vinegar toward the end of cooking.

Cook the pasta according to the package directions.

Put the spinach in the bottom of a large bowl. Put the hot lentils, tomato mix and pasta on top and toss until the spinach is just wilted. Taste for seasoning. Serve with an additional drizzle of olive oil on top.

17 thoughts on “Cheap Ass Monday: Stop me, oh-ho-oh, stop me.”

Actually, it’s the Cuyahoga River that caught on fire. But it does empty into Lake Erie at the Cleveland waterfront, so yeah, close enough.

I’m glad you mentioned those are cloves on that onion. From the picture I was afraid those were flies, like some mutant decoration straight out of Cake Wrecks.

In general, I tend to regard Cook’s Illustrated as a voice of authority, but sometimes it seems they undermine themselves by not having any institutional memory. The impression I get from reading their reviews over time is that they seem to a) change ratings often, and b) use different criteria during each subsequent review.

If you can use a word like “falafelizes,” then I don’t think you need to worry about making chiffonade into a verb.

I’m an editor by trade, so I am the final word on such things. Assuming you’re paying me my standard rate to issue directives about such important matters. Which you’re not, so never mind.

And now, to comment on the actual food in this post: It would never have occurred to me to pair lentils with pasta, but I do love lentils, and God knows, pasta is my BFF, so I’ll probably try this at some point.

i’m with you on cook’s illustrated. i’ve learned to trust the cookbooks, but have lost faith in the magazine reviews.

eating club, yup, i score on a per-tomato basis. because now i have the rest of the can, and i’ll use them for something else. also because i already had the can in the house and didn’t feel like running to the store for a smaller, cheaper can of tomatoes.

toylady, like i said, surprisingly good.

iamnotachef, that can was for demonstrative purposes only, to show the proper spelling.

okay, that’s a lie. i’ve just never read the label. this isn’t even my favorite pretty packaging, i was just sucked in by the blatant mislabeling. now i’ll have to scrutinize my usual brand.

kristin, so it has been written, so it has been done.

lentils and pasta alone would be bleh, but lentils and pasta with other stuff is yum. of course, i’m italian and we manage to work pasta into everything, even pie. so there are no guarantees.

I too use only SM tomatoes – also they are canned without the obscene amounts of salt we tend to put in everything over here, letting you control the salt content of your recipe while cooking. I hate that anytime I want to add something from a can I have to omit like ALL the salt from the recipe……

Typo – you have 1 onion instead of 2 in the ingredients list.
So much for Kristin….(lol!!!)
And btw: On your blog you can verbicize any nouns you like (I do on mine)!

Looks good! Incidentally, there is in fact a Mid Eastern–or at least Egyptian–version of pasta and lentils. It’s called kushari. Lentils, macaroni and–just to be a solid starch bomb–a little rice, mixed to your specifications and topped with a vinegary, cuminy tomato sauce, and crispy fried onions. Splash on some garlic vinegar and hot sauce, and it’s the best 30 cents you’ll ever spend.

Dude. And here I thought that learning about the “onion pique” was just a big fat fucking waste of time at school. Turns out, it’s used by real people too! Except in school we have to fasten the bay leaf to the onion itself using a clove or two as studs. Awesome.

claudia, i felt seriously healthy after i ate this. sub in some whole wheat pasta to go over the top.

and then i ate a bowl of ice cream. you know, for balance.

jesse, yes, and i am duly chastised. see the newest post.

kristie, it has an actual name! that makes it even more fun! serves me right for not spending more time reading the CIA textbook i got for xmas this year, or i would have known. i really do use one every time i cook lentils.

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Once upon a time, I wrote this food blog. It was a pretty great blog, if I do say so myself. I don't write it any more, but all the recipes and hijinx remain available for your cooking and reading pleasure.